Professor Griff
Richard Griffin (born August 1, 1960), better known by his stage name Professor Griff, is an American rapper, spoken word performer, author, and lecturer recognized for his role as Minister of Information in the hip-hop group Public Enemy.[1][2] As head of the group's S1W security unit, he helped shape Public Enemy's militant aesthetic and Afrocentric political messaging during the late 1980s.[3][4] Griff's tenure ended in June 1989 after he stated in a Washington Times interview that "the Jews" were responsible for "the majority of wickedness" worldwide, including promoting drug use, the spread of AIDS, and controlling exploitative elements in the entertainment industry; these remarks prompted accusations of antisemitism, a temporary drop of Public Enemy by Def Jam Recordings, and his dismissal from the group.[5][6][7] Following his exit, Griff launched a solo career, forming acts like the Last Asiatic Disciples and releasing albums emphasizing black nationalist themes, while establishing himself as an educator through lectures, books, and initiatives such as a mobile black history museum to promote awareness of African heritage and self-reliance.[2][8] He was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as part of Public Enemy in 2013 and received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.[9][10]Early Life and Influences
Childhood and Education
Richard Duane Griffin was born on August 1, 1960, in Roosevelt, Nassau County, New York.[11][12][13] He spent his early years in this Long Island community, where limited public records detail his family circumstances or precise socioeconomic context, though the period coincided with broader racial tensions in the United States following the peak of the civil rights movement.[12] Details on Griffin's formal education remain sparse in available accounts, with no verified records of higher education institutions attended; he later emphasized practical and self-directed learning over traditional academic paths. Griffin cultivated an early interest in martial arts, enlisting in the U.S. Army sometime after completing secondary schooling and opening a martial arts school by 1979 at age 19, reflecting formative pursuits in physical discipline and self-improvement.[14][11] He has described developing knowledge in historical subjects through independent study during this phase, though specific early sources or timelines for such interests are not extensively documented.[13]Exposure to Black Nationalism and Islam
In the 1970s, during his youth in Roosevelt, Long Island, Richard Griffin—later known as Professor Griff—was influenced by the legacy of Malcolm X and the broader black power movement, which emphasized black self-determination and cultural pride amid ongoing racial tensions.[7] These ideas resonated with Griffin as a teenager active in local music and sports scenes, shaping his early worldview toward empowerment and resistance against systemic oppression.[7] By 1979, Griffin paused his involvement in DJing and music to establish Unity Force, a martial arts academy that doubled as an Islamic study group, marking his initial structured engagement with Islamic teachings.[7] This initiative drew directly from Nation of Islam (NOI) ideology under Louis Farrakhan, whom Griffin regarded as a key figure, incorporating principles of economic self-reliance, community discipline, and separation from white-dominated society to foster black independence.[7][14] Farrakhan's leadership of the NOI since 1977 emphasized these tenets, appealing to Griffin as a framework for personal and collective transformation through rigorous study and physical training.[15] Griffin's exposure extended to concepts from the Five Percent Nation, an offshoot of the NOI founded in 1964, which stressed black divinity, the supreme knowledge of self, and numerological interpretations of history and civilization.[16] These teachings, which portrayed black men as original gods and promoted intellectual awakening over orthodox religious submission, aligned with the NOI's racial cosmology and influenced Griffin's early educational efforts within Unity Force, blending martial discipline with esoteric self-knowledge.[16] This ideological foundation prioritized empirical self-examination and causal links between historical disempowerment and the need for separatist reclamation, distinct from mainstream Islamic orthodoxy.[15]Rise in Hip-Hop
Formation of Security of the First World
Richard Griffin, professionally known as Professor Griff, established Security of the First World (S1W) in the mid-1980s by rebranding his preexisting Unity Force organization, which he had founded in 1979 as a martial arts academy combined with Islamic study sessions.[7] Unity Force initially operated as a security detail for local party circuits and community events on Long Island, New York, motivated by incidents such as the shooting of a friend that underscored the need for organized protection against violence.[14] The S1W adopted a paramilitary-style framework, emphasizing strict discipline, physical conditioning, and tactical maneuvers inspired by Griffin's karate expertise and broader black militant traditions aimed at self-defense and empowerment.[7] [17] Members, numbering in the dozens, received training in hand-to-hand combat, formation marching, and synchronized choreography to maintain order and deter threats during gatherings prone to disruptions.[14] This formation highlighted Griffin's organizational acumen developed outside hip-hop, blending security protocols with ideological instruction drawn from black nationalist sources to foster unity and readiness among participants.[17] Early S1W drills incorporated performative routines that merged protective duties with activist demonstrations, serving as precursors to more structured group dynamics.[7]Joining Public Enemy
Richard Griffin, professionally known as Professor Griff, joined Public Enemy in its formative period leading up to the release of the group's debut album Yo! Bum Rush the Show on April 14, 1987, initially recruited by Chuck D to lead the Security of the First World (S1W) for non-musical support including security and audience hype.[18][19] The S1W, drawing from Griff's background in the U.S. Army and martial arts training, functioned as the group's protective detail and performed synchronized, paramilitary-style choreography during live performances, projecting a disciplined, confrontational aesthetic that amplified Public Enemy's revolutionary stance against systemic oppression.[15][20] This security-focused entry evolved into a more prominent onstage presence for Griff and the S1W, with members clad in uniforms and executing drill-like maneuvers to symbolize black self-defense and empowerment, thereby enhancing the visual intensity of shows amid rising tensions from the group's provocative lyrics on race and power structures.[18] Griff's role soon formalized as the self-appointed "Minister of Information," tasked with interpreting and disseminating the political and historical underpinnings of Public Enemy's messages to fans, emphasizing self-knowledge and resistance through structured briefings and interactions that positioned the group as educators rather than mere entertainers.[15][21]Role in Public Enemy
Contributions to Albums and Performances
As co-founder and leader of Public Enemy's Security of the First World (S1W) troupe, Professor Griff directed choreographed military-style routines that formed a core element of the group's live performances. These routines involved uniformed S1W members executing synchronized drills, steps, and chants onstage, providing a disciplined visual counterpoint to the rap delivery during tours.[20][22] Griff's choreography amplified the high-energy presentation supporting key albums, including It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, released on June 28, 1988, where S1W formations underscored the album's tracks in live settings through precise, militant movements.[20] The S1W's onstage role, marshaled by Griff, contributed to a confrontational aesthetic evoking disciplined group dynamics, setting an intense tone from the show's outset.[22] Beyond performance direction, Griff oversaw S1W's security functions during tours in the late 1980s, managing crowd safety and protecting the group as attendance grew with Public Enemy's fame. This dual responsibility ensured orderly, protected environments for high-stakes concerts, allowing focus on delivery without disruption.[20][14]Position as Minister of Information
In Public Enemy, Professor Griff held the position of Minister of Information, a title conferred by frontman Chuck D beginning with the group's 1988 album It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back. This role centered on elucidating the band's intricate, metaphor-heavy lyrics and militant political stances to journalists, fans, and external audiences, thereby bridging the gap between Public Enemy's dense artistic output and its intended ideological impact. Griff's responsibilities included unpacking references to systemic racism, media manipulation, and historical injustices, drawing from influences such as Malcolm X, Mao Zedong, and Louis Farrakhan to frame the music as a call for intellectual and communal awakening.[7] Griff advanced conscious hip-hop as an instrument of black empowerment, positioning Public Enemy's work as a counter to cultural erasure and economic disenfranchisement by urging listeners toward self-knowledge and organized resistance. In pre-1989 interviews, he stressed themes of cultural pride and precautionary self-defense, portraying armed awareness—not aggression—as essential for black survival amid perceived institutional threats, while advocating unity to reclaim narrative control from dominant media structures. For instance, in a November 1988 discussion, Griff articulated his mission as "a re-education of black people," focused on instilling resilience through historical literacy and collective identity.[7][23] Complementing verbal explanations, Griff coordinated visual elements via the Security of the First World (S1Ws) unit, staging disciplined, paramilitary-inspired routines at performances to symbolize disciplined vigilance and communal solidarity, thereby amplifying the spoken message of empowerment without direct combat endorsement. These efforts underscored Public Enemy's broader aim to transform hip-hop into a platform for black self-determination, distinct from mere entertainment, by equipping audiences with tools for critiquing power imbalances.[7]Controversies
Antisemitic Statements and 1989 Departure
In May 1989, Professor Griff, Public Enemy's self-appointed Minister of Information, gave an interview to The Washington Times in which he asserted that Jews were responsible for "the majority of wickedness that goes on across the globe," specifically implicating them in the crack cocaine epidemic afflicting black communities and in exerting control over black media outlets and record companies.[5][24] These statements, which echoed longstanding antisemitic tropes regarding Jewish influence and conspiracy, ignited immediate backlash from Jewish advocacy groups, including the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), which condemned them as promoting hatred and stereotypes.[25][26] The controversy escalated rapidly, prompting protests at Public Enemy concerts and leading their record label, Def Jam Recordings, to temporarily drop the group amid pressure from industry figures and advertisers wary of association with the remarks.[6][7] Tour dates faced cancellations or disruptions due to organized opposition, further straining the group's momentum following the release of their album It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back.[5] On June 21, 1989, Public Enemy leader Chuck D publicly announced Griff's firing during a press conference, stating that the decision was necessary to preserve the group's focus and integrity amid the uproar.[25][27] This move followed internal deliberations and external demands, marking Griff's abrupt departure from the lineup he had helped shape since 1984.[7]Rejoining and Subsequent Exit from Public Enemy
Following his dismissal in 1989 amid controversy, Professor Griff briefly rejoined Public Enemy in a reduced capacity later that year, serving as "supreme allied chief of radio warfare" rather than his prior prominent role as Minister of Information.[28] This arrangement proved temporary, with Griffin departing again amid ongoing internal frictions by early 1990.[15] Griff fully reintegrated with the group in 1998, participating in the recording and promotion of the He Got Game soundtrack album, released on April 21, 1998, to accompany Spike Lee's film of the same name.[29] He appeared alongside Chuck D and Flavor Flav in contemporary interviews and contributed to live tours, marking a period of renewed collaboration.[30] By 2000, ideological and creative divergences—rooted in unresolved tensions from Griffin's past statements and the group's shifting direction—prompted his second and final exit from Public Enemy.[31] The group has since operated with fluctuating members, including DJ Lord as a replacement for Terminator X, excluding Griffin from its core lineup.[29]Defenses and Ongoing Debates on Jewish Influence
Griffin has consistently rebutted characterizations of his 1989 remarks as blanket antisemitism, maintaining that they targeted specific Jewish executives in the music industry accused of exploiting black artists through predatory contracts and cultural gatekeeping, rather than Jews as an ethnic or religious group.[32] He has argued that his statements were taken out of context by media outlets, emphasizing a focus on accountability for power imbalances rather than inherent ethnic traits.[7] Influenced by Louis Farrakhan's Nation of Islam teachings, Griffin frames these critiques as analyses of elite networks exerting disproportionate control over black cultural production, citing Farrakhan's documented speeches on media manipulation dating back to the 1980s.[33] In the 2020s, Griffin continued these defenses through platforms like his July 2020 appearance on Nick Cannon's "Cannon's Class" podcast, where he elaborated on structural influences in entertainment and finance, asserting that open discourse on such dynamics is stifled to protect entrenched interests.[34] This episode, which led to Cannon's temporary firing by ViacomCBS for promoting similar theories, highlighted Griffin's view that empirical observations of influence—such as Jewish founders establishing five of the eight major Hollywood studios (e.g., Adolph Zukor at Paramount in 1912, Louis B. Mayer at MGM in 1924)—are dismissed as conspiracy rather than examined as historical fact.[35] Griffin has contended that this pattern perpetuates tensions in black-Jewish relations by ignoring mutual historical support, including Jewish funding and legal aid during the civil rights era, while prioritizing narratives of perpetual victimhood.[36] Debates persist among commentators, with some right-leaning analysts aligning Griffin's emphasis on media consolidation—evidenced by persistent overrepresentation in executive roles at outlets like CBS and Disney—against broader critiques of globalist agendas that transcend ethnicity but converge on similar institutional power.[37] Griffin maintains that suppressing these discussions, often via institutional pressures from academia and mainstream media prone to left-leaning biases, hinders causal understanding of cultural exploitation, advocating instead for first-principles scrutiny of ownership data over reflexive labeling.[38] These exchanges underscore unresolved questions about whether highlighting verifiable disparities constitutes legitimate critique or veiled prejudice, with Griffin rejecting the latter in favor of evidence-based accountability.[32]Philosophical and Ideological Views
Adherence to Nation of Islam and Five Percent Nation
Richard Griffin, known as Professor Griff, has long adhered to the teachings of the Nation of Islam (NOI) as led by Louis Farrakhan, emphasizing doctrines centered on black self-reliance, moral discipline, and economic independence as pathways to empowerment for African Americans.[14] In NOI cosmology, which Griff promotes in his lectures and writings, black people are positioned as the "original people" or divine Asiatic race, inherently superior and tasked with reclaiming sovereignty through adherence to strict ethical codes and separation from corrupting influences.[16] This framework, drawn from Elijah Muhammad's foundational texts revived by Farrakhan, frames self-empowerment as a rejection of dependency on external systems, fostering community-based institutions like businesses and schools to build autonomy.[39] Griff also identifies with the Five Percent Nation, or Nation of Gods and Earths (NGE), an offshoot of the NOI founded by Clarence 13X in 1963, where he promotes its core numerological and epistemological tools for personal and collective elevation.[40] Central to NGE doctrine, which Griff incorporates into his teachings, is the "85-5-10" paradigm: 85% of the population as mentally enslaved and unaware, 10% as exploiters maintaining control, and 5% as the enlightened "poor righteous teachers" who awaken others through knowledge of self—manifesting as "gods" (black men as divine originals) and "earths" (black women as supportive manifestations).[16] This structure encourages rigorous study of "Supreme Mathematics" and "Supreme Alphabet," ciphering daily life events to decode truths and cultivate mental mastery, positioning adherents as active agents in their liberation rather than passive victims.[41] In applying these ideologies to hip-hop, Griff advocates for the genre's freestyle "ciphers" as modern equivalents to NGE knowledge ciphers, transforming rap sessions into forums for disseminating empowerment doctrines and building communal awareness among youth.[16] His solo projects, such as the 1991 album Kao's II Wiz7Dome, explicitly reference NGE symbolism—like the number seven denoting "God"—to encode self-knowledge lessons within music, urging listeners to adopt these frameworks for transcending systemic limitations through intellectual and spiritual discipline.[40]Afrocentrism and Critiques of Western Culture
Professor Griff has promoted Afrocentrism through his role as national director of the Black History 101 Mobile Museum, which features exhibits emphasizing African contributions to world civilization and pre-colonial achievements, such as advancements in science, architecture, and philosophy.[8][42] In lectures, he advocates centering historical narratives on African origins, including the assertion that ancient Egyptians were black Africans whose innovations were appropriated by later civilizations.[43] He argues for rewriting history to reclaim these narratives, claiming that Eurocentric accounts, such as Greek attributions of philosophy and technology, obscure African primacy by necessitating the erasure of evidence from the continent.[44] Griff critiques Western cultural impositions as mechanisms of psychological control, describing a 500-year process of "Minticide"—the deliberate destruction of black minds and cultural memory—to enforce inferiority.[44] He rejects Eurocentric symbols and holidays, such as Independence Day celebrations, as irrelevant or hypocritical for black Americans enslaved during the nation's founding, and points to religious depictions of a white Jesus as reinforcing self-loathing by associating darkness with evil.[44] These views extend to economic critiques, where he promotes black self-education and self-reliance as antidotes to dependency, urging communities to prioritize internal development over reliance on external systems.[45][46] In hip-hop, Griff laments the shift from conscious, spiritually rooted expression to commercialization, which he sees as diluting black political awareness and allowing cultural disrespect.[47] His book The Psychological Covert War on Hip Hop details how the genre, originally a vehicle for truth-telling and unity, has been co-opted, leading younger generations to disengage from its original empowering ethos.[47][48] This commercialization, in his analysis, perpetuates disconnection from historical self-determination and fosters passive consumption over active resistance to Western cultural dominance.[49]Views on Media Control and Power Structures
Professor Griff has asserted that media and entertainment industries are disproportionately controlled by Jewish individuals and networks, citing this as a mechanism for perpetuating negative portrayals of Black people and suppressing Black empowerment. In a 1989 interview with The Washington Times, he stated that "Jews have a grip on America" and are responsible for "the majority of wickedness that goes on across the globe," specifically pointing to their dominance in the music industry, media, television, and movies as enabling systemic manipulation.[15] He argued that such control historically includes actions harmful to Black communities, such as a purported "history of killing black men," framing these networks as prioritizing ethnic solidarity over broader societal equity.[15] Griff maintains that this ethnic concentration in power structures—observable in the founding and leadership of major Hollywood studios like Warner Bros. and MGM by Jewish immigrants, alongside ongoing executive roles—facilitates causal chains of influence where content production reinforces anti-Black stereotypes, from crime glorification in films to diluted cultural narratives in music. In his 2020 podcast appearance on Cannon's Class, he referenced specific figures like "the Cohens and the Moscowitz" as exemplars of this control in music, film, and TV, linking it to broader elite entities including the Rothschild family, centralized banking systems, and roughly 13 interconnected families or six major media corporations that dictate global entertainment output.[34] He described this as a "psychological covert war" designed to erode Black identity and autonomy, where media amplifies division and materialism to prevent unified resistance.[34] To counter these structures, Griff advocates for economic disengagement and self-reliance, urging Black audiences to boycott controlled outlets and invest in independent platforms, echoing Nation of Islam-influenced calls for parallel institutions. He has emphasized that power accrues through networked loyalties rather than merit alone, dismissing critiques of his views as deflection tactics like the "anti-Semitic" label, which he claims serves to protect entrenched interests and fracture alliances.[34] These positions, reiterated across lectures and interviews, position media dominance not as coincidental diversity but as a deliberate ethnic bulwark influencing finance, policy, and culture to maintain disparities.[34]Post-Public Enemy Career
Solo Music and Group Projects
Following his exits from Public Enemy, Professor Griff formed the group the Last Asiatic Disciples, which included members such as Life (Sean Peacock), Jim “Obie” O'Brien, and B-Wyze, and released the album Pawns in the Game on March 27, 1990, via Luke Records.[50][51] The project emphasized conscious hip-hop with politically charged lyrics critiquing social structures and power dynamics, delivered in a style blending rap and spoken word elements reminiscent of earlier artists like the Last Poets.[52][53] Griff's subsequent solo efforts continued this focus on ideological messaging over mainstream production. His 1991 album Kao's II Wiz7Dome, released independently, featured experimental tracks prioritizing lyrical content on black empowerment and cultural awareness.[54] In 1998, he issued Blood of the Profit on August 18 via Lethal Records, a self-produced work with 13 tracks addressing economic exploitation and systemic critiques, aligning with his longstanding Nation of Islam influences.[55][56] Later releases, such as Disturb N Tha Peace in 1992, maintained a spoken word-heavy approach, often eschewing polished beats for raw, lecture-like delivery to convey messages of resistance and self-knowledge.[57] These projects collectively prioritized didactic content rooted in Afrocentric and Five Percenter principles, distinguishing Griff's output from commercial hip-hop trends.[58]Activism and Lectures
Professor Griff maintains an active presence on the international lecture circuit, delivering talks that frame hip-hop as a vehicle for social and political revolution, drawing from his experience as Public Enemy's Minister of Information.[59] These presentations often explore the genre's potential to foster awareness of power structures and community empowerment, positioning it beyond mere entertainment as a tool for ideological awakening.[60] Central to his educational efforts is the Black History 101 Mobile Museum, which he transports to universities and community events to provide interactive exhibits on African American history, emphasizing overlooked narratives and self-reliance.[8] In sessions such as these, Griffin highlights the need for historical literacy to counter cultural disconnection, urging audiences to integrate lessons from past struggles into contemporary action.[61] Following his relocation to Atlanta in the mid-1990s, Griffin undertook a brief role as a bounty hunter for a family member's bail bondsman operation, applying skills in pursuit, restraint, and risk assessment to underscore practical self-defense in real-world scenarios.[11] This experience built on his foundational martial arts training, initiated after U.S. Army service in the late 1970s, where he established a dojo and study group blending physical discipline with Islamic principles to promote resilience against societal pitfalls.[14] Through subsequent workshops, he teaches techniques in hand-to-hand combat alongside historical context, aiming to equip participants with tools for personal security and avoidance of exploitative influences like unchecked street violence.[62]Recent Developments
Engagements in 2020s
In 2025, Professor Griff hosted multiple episodes of his online series Identity Crisis, addressing symptoms of existential confusion, lack of purpose, and discontent with career or relationships as manifestations of deeper identity issues within communities.[63] [64] He also launched Writer's Block in October 2025, exploring the psychology and process of writing, from revolutionary lyrics to screenplays, as a platform for creative and ideological expression. Griff remained active in music production, releasing eight new projects throughout 2025, including re-releases and collaborations such as rap-metal works and contributions under aliases like Soul Om Collective and Great Oracle Dialects. [65] These efforts coincided with his commentary on industry disruptions, including the cancellation of 2025 Grammy-related events he was set to host, attributed to decisions by major labels Universal, Warner, Sony, and BMG.[66] In July 2025, he discussed backlash against the Essence Festival, linking it to broader boycotts of retailers like Target and shifts away from diversity initiatives in Black-oriented events.[67] On September 9, 2025, Griff delivered a lecture titled "Black History 101" to students at Johnson & Wales University in Charlotte, North Carolina, emphasizing historical lessons for contemporary understanding.[68] He hosted Black News Media and sessions on the erasure of Black media voices in early September 2025, critiquing the marginalization of narratives in mainstream outlets.[69] [70] Via social media and broadcasts, Griff commented on rising political violence in the United States during 2024 and 2025, noting a surge in high-profile incidents amid escalating tensions.[71] In November 2024, his Selection Countdown 2024 episode analyzed election dynamics, including endorsements of Kamala Harris by figures like Bruce Springsteen, Taylor Swift, and Beyoncé alongside certain rappers.[72] Earlier that year, he addressed Donald Trump's proposed 10-point plan for urban revitalization on Instagram.[73] These engagements underscored his ongoing role in dissecting power structures, community conflicts, and cultural shifts through direct platforms rather than traditional media.Commentary on Current Events
In recent lectures and media appearances, Professor Griff has critiqued corporate media for perpetuating biased racial narratives that marginalize Black historical contributions and foster division, as evidenced by his September 2025 discussion on the systematic erasure of Black media references, which he describes as a deliberate silencing of authentic Black voices within dominant cultural storytelling.[70] He links this to broader patterns of narrative control, arguing that mainstream outlets prioritize selective portrayals that undermine Black self-determination, echoing his earlier analyses of psychological manipulation in hip-hop and public discourse.[74] Griff advocates for Black unity as a counter to perceived elite-driven divisions, emphasizing solidarity between African Americans and continental Africans to resist external manipulations. In a July 2025 livestream, he hosted a session titled "U-N-I-T-Y: The Unity of Black Americans and Black Africans," urging collective resistance against forces that exploit intra-Black differences for geopolitical gain.[75] This stance aligns with his ongoing narrative of elite orchestration of "Diaspora Wars," as explored in August 2025 interviews where he highlighted political strategies targeting Black communities to sow discord rather than foster empowerment.[76] Regarding Black-Jewish relations, Griff has pushed for unfiltered dialogues centered on historical truths over performative reconciliation, critiquing selective engagements that avoid substantive accountability. In ongoing commentary, he maintains that genuine discussion requires addressing power dynamics in media and finance without evasion, as reiterated in 2025 reflections on enduring tensions from his 1989 statements, which he frames as calls for transparency amid claims of disproportionate influence.[36] He has described such overdue conversations as essential for mutual understanding, rejecting optics-driven narratives that prioritize suppression over empirical reckoning.[77]Legacy and Reception
Impact on Conscious Hip-Hop
As the founder and leader of Public Enemy's S1W (Security of the First World) unit, established in 1979 as a martial arts and study group that expanded to nearly 300 members by the mid-1980s, Professor Griff integrated paramilitary uniforms, berets, camouflage, combat boots, and synchronized martial dance routines into the group's live shows, pioneering a disciplined visual style that symbolized black unity and resistance, influencing militant aesthetics in subsequent conscious rap acts.[7][78] Serving as the group's Minister of Information, Griff conducted research on political history, Malcolm X's teachings, and Nation of Islam principles to supply material for Chuck D's lyrics, steering Public Enemy toward content focused on black self-education, empowerment, and critique of media control rather than party-oriented or materialistic themes, which helped solidify conscious hip-hop's emphasis on intellectual and revolutionary depth starting with albums like It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back in 1988.[78][7] Griff's post-Public Enemy lectures, such as "The Psychology Covert War on Hip Hop" delivered at events tied to Muhammad's Mosque No. 93 in 2006, promoted hip-hop's potential for "mind revolution" by urging artists to prioritize higher-self themes like meditation, community uplift, and accountability over lower impulses, while drawing on Nation of Islam and Five Percenter doctrines to mentor audiences with the principle of "each one, teach three," thereby extending the genre's tradition of ideological empowerment to newer generations.[79][80]Criticisms and Achievements
Griff's contributions to Public Enemy bolstered the group's ideological authenticity, particularly through his role as Minister of Information and training of the S1W (Security of the First World) unit, which provided a militaristic visual and performative element during live tours and videos.[12] This enhanced the militant aesthetic that distinguished albums like It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back (1988), which achieved double-platinum certification and contributed to the group's total sales exceeding 4.9 million units across early releases during his tenure.[81] Public Enemy's success, including a 2020 Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award recognizing foundational members like Griff, underscored how his advocacy for black nationalist themes drove commercial viability amid hip-hop's politicization.[82] Critics have accused Griff of antisemitism based on a May 1989 Washington Times interview where he stated that Jewish people were "responsible for the majority of wickedness that goes on across the globe," remarks that prompted his initial firing from Public Enemy and widespread condemnation.[83] His adherence to Nation of Islam doctrines, which emphasize traditional gender hierarchies—portraying women primarily as supportive homemakers—and view homosexuality as a moral deviation influenced by external corruption, drew further charges of misogyny and homophobia from outlets decrying such positions as regressive.[84] These positions, while rooted in Griff's first-principles critique of cultural decay and power imbalances, empirically aligned with mainstream media and label avoidance, as evidenced by his post-1989 solo releases like Pawns in the Game (1990) and Kao's II Wiz7Dome (1991) failing to secure major promotional backing or chart significantly, despite independent distribution.[85] This marginalization highlights a pattern where uncompromised rhetoric on elite influence—often intersecting with NOI analyses—correlates with industry exclusion, limiting Griff's achievements beyond Public Enemy's collective triumphs.[86]Personal Life
Family and Professional Pursuits Outside Music
After departing Public Enemy in 1989, Griffin relocated to Atlanta, Georgia, where he briefly worked as a bounty hunter to generate income through a family member's bail bondsman service.[11][87] Griffin has maintained a low-profile personal life, with limited public details about his family. He married rapper Solé in 2017; Solé, previously wed to Ginuwine from 2003 to 2015, shares two daughters from that marriage.[88] Information regarding Griffin's own children remains largely undisclosed.[12] Beyond music, Griffin's background in the U.S. Army and martial arts informed early non-musical professional activities, including training security personnel, though specific post-1989 ventures in security consulting are not extensively documented in public records.Discography
Solo Albums
Professor Griff's debut solo album, Pawns in the Game, was released in 1990 on Luke Records, featuring tracks that employed chess metaphors to depict systemic struggles faced by black communities and critiquing media manipulation and power structures.[53] The album served as a direct response to his dismissal from Public Enemy amid controversy over his statements, emphasizing themes of awareness, self-determination, and resistance against perceived oppressive forces.[54] His follow-up, Kao's II Wiz7Dome, arrived on July 23, 1991, also via Luke Records in collaboration with the Last Asiatic Disciples, blending militant rap with esoteric references to knowledge and enlightenment drawn from Five Percenter ideology.[89] The project explored redemption through intellectual and spiritual awakening, incorporating production by Luther "Uncle Luke" Campbell and addressing racial inequities with confrontational lyrics.[90] In 1992, Griff issued Disturb N Tha Peace (Freedom Is Just a Mind Revolution Away) on Luke Records, his third solo effort, which intensified calls for mental liberation and black unity while railing against institutional racism and cultural appropriation.[91] Subsequent releases, such as Blood of the Profit in 1998 and And the Word Became Flesh in 2001, continued motifs of prophetic critique and empowerment rooted in Nation of Islam influences, though they received limited commercial traction. More recent works include Inner G Code (2020) and Asafo Soul (2024), maintaining his focus on conscious hip-hop amid evolving personal and activist narratives.[3]| Album Title | Release Year | Label |
|---|---|---|
| Pawns in the Game | 1990 | Luke Records[53] |
| Kao's II Wiz7Dome | 1991 | Luke/Atlantic Records[89] |
| Disturb N Tha Peace | 1992 | Luke Records[91] |
| Blood of the Profit | 1998 | N/A |
| And the Word Became Flesh | 2001 | Blackheart Records[3] |
| Inner G Code | 2020 | Independent[3] |
| Asafo Soul | 2024 | Independent[3] |